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heritage

Heritage Dynamo, by Kit Martin

Posted on July 5, 2018 by Administration

Kit Martin looks at the ripple effect of heritage preservation in Jamaica (This article is reproduced with the kind permission of the Georgian Group in whose newsletter it first appeared.)  

Resources Georgian Group, heritage, preservation

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Useful Links

  • Jamaica National Heritage Trust

  • The Falmouth Project

  • Jamaica Colonial Heritage Society

  • Jamaican High Commission, London

  • Black Cultural Archives

  • Georgian Group

  • INTBAU

  • Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings

  • Association for Studies in the Conservation of Historic Buildings

  • Prince’s Foundation for Building Community

  • A Tour of Jamaica's Great Houses, Plantations, & Pens

  • Family History Jamaica

  • Caribbean Family History Research

  • A Parcel of Ribbons - Anne Powers on genealogy

  • Sharon Tomlin on genealogy

  • Antony Maitland on genealogy

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West India merchant Falmouth Georgian Group Scotland Dr Ivor Conolley army American War of Independence Good Hope power relations Windrush iron frame exhibition Trelawny enslaved Africans museum Jamaica plantation first world war the enslaved emancipation sugar Tharp slaveholders colonial Caribbean Jamaica National Heritage Trust Port Royal Fort Stewart St Peter's Church volunteers empire timber decay Rum Kingston Georgian Society of Jamaica British West Indies regiment Port Authority Spanish Town Fort Charles earthquake slavery

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slavery Kingston West India merchant Fort Charles Port Royal timber decay exhibition Tharp earthquake museum Trelawny emancipation plantation iron frame Jamaica Scotland empire St Peter's Church enslaved Africans American War of Independence Georgian Group Good Hope volunteers colonial Caribbean Windrush Rum Dr Ivor Conolley Port Authority army slaveholders the enslaved Jamaica National Heritage Trust power relations first world war Falmouth Georgian Society of Jamaica Spanish Town British West Indies regiment Fort Stewart sugar

Restoring

Properly restored and maintained, historic buildings can serve their local communities in different ways: practically, they house post offices, courthouses and churches, as well as private dwellings; economically, they form the basis of heritage tourism which can help struggling towns survive. They also reinforce a community’s pride in its local and national heritage.

The conservation and preservation of Jamaica’s historic records and material culture – its furniture, paintings and other objects from the past – are essential in helping people to understand Jamaica’s fascinating history.

Saving

Many historic buildings disappear every year as a result of extreme weather and unchecked degradation. While there is recognition at government level and from heritage and conservation organisations of the need to preserve and restore Jamaica’s historic buildings, funding is frequently a problem. It is therefore all the more important that we contribute what we can to restoration, both to help preserve historic buildings and to support the organisations on the island which are struggling to carry out this important work.

Historic documents are liable to deteriorate in Jamaica’s extreme climate. Concerns over daily environmental challenges as well as dramatic events such as storms and earthquakes should focus attention on efforts to record and digitise historic materials.

TRAINING

Training young people in the required restoration skills can also provide a route to employment in specialist conservation and preservation work.

Jamaican Heritage Renewal is a charity registered in the UK, no. 1074915.

It is a company limited by guarantee, registered in England and Wales, no. 3447992

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